How Does Chemisorption Impact Physisorption? Molecular View of Defect Incorporation and Perturbation of Two-Dimensional Self-Assembly

Ana M. Bragança, Brandon E. Hirsch*, Ana Sanz-Matias, Yi Hu, Peter Walke, Kazukuni Tahara, Jeremy N. Harvey, Yoshito Tobe, Steven De Feyter

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Chemical and structural defects in otherwise pristine materials can result in either an improved or degraded material performance. Unfortunately, little is known about the role of these defects in complex hierarchical processes, such as self-assembly. Here, the influence of defective surfaces on physisorbed self-assembly occurring at liquid/solid interfaces is investigated. Covalently bound defects on graphite surfaces are generated by electrochemically activating diazonium cations. After creating the defective substrates, a solution containing self-assembling molecules was deposited on the surface. Subsequent scanning probe investigations expose how the chemisorbed molecular units can either be incorporated within a porous hexagonal network, or generate local perturbations in the form of partial or full desorption of the physisorbed molecules. Overall, the chemisorbed molecules alter the local energy landscape for self-assembly to isolate new molecular packing arrangements. With a single-molecule perspective, this work outlines how chemical defects contribute to the formation of metastable assemblies and their evolutionary pathways toward higher-symmetry networks.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)24046-24054
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Physical Chemistry C
Volume122
Issue number42
DOIs
StatePublished - 25 Oct 2018

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